Not yet registered?Register now to download, share, and save resources. It's simple, safe, and free! Learn More You are now "Test Driving" Teachers' DomainYou may view up to 7 resources in this limited trial period. You have 6 views remaining. Register now for unlimited free access and to download, share, and save resources. Learn More About Registration:Registering with Teachers' Domain is free and allows you to:
Thank you for "Test Driving" Teachers' DomainYou have viewed all seven resources permitted in this limited trial period. You may continue to browse the site, but to view, download, share, and save resources, you must register now. Registration is simple, safe, and free. For more information:Learn about our online Professional Development Courses, or review our Privacy Policy. If you still have questions, please contact us. |
Resource: Darwin: Reluctant Rebel
Media Type:
QuickTime Video
Length: 3m 29s
Size: 5.6 MB
Media Available for Purchase:
- Background Essay
- Discussion Questions
- Standards
Darwin's grandfather, Eramus, who died in 1802, was more the revolutionary type, with a far-reaching and unfettered mind. He supported the American and French revolutions, wrote erotic verse, and published prolifically on medicine and zoology. In his book Zoonomia he even developed his own version of "transmutation," as evolution was then called. He did not, though, come up with a theory as earthshaking as his grandson would.
Charles Darwin was, in a word, respectable -- and wanted to remain so. He grew up an advantaged, upper-class young man, though with a growing passion for natural history -- not the parson's life for which he was trained. Darwin was invited on the five-year voyage of the Beagle to provide company for the aristocratic young Captain FitzRoy. (The rigid etiquette of the 19th century forbade the captain from dining with his own officers.) Darwin took advantage of the opportunity his travels provided to expand his knowledge of natural history.
Because his theories of evolution and natural selection were sure to disrupt his comfortable relationships with more traditionally minded people -- including his wife, Emma -- Darwin developed his ideas in private. He repeatedly delayed publishing his ideas, dreading the controversy they would generate, for the conclusions that his research had led him to draw were at odds with the dominant belief at the time: that God created all species in their present form, not that they had evolved through natural selection.
No question, many of the more conservative members of the church and the scientific establishment despised On the Origin of Species when it was published in 1859. Darwin was roasted in caricatures in magazines. By contrast, rising young scientific stars embraced Darwin's ideas, and -- in contrast to the myth -- On the Origin of Species was taken very seriously by almost all commentators.
Teachers' Domain is proud to be a Pathways portal to the National Science Digital Library.
Source: Evolution: "Darwin's Dangerous Idea"
Produced for Teachers' Domain by:


Collection Developed for Teachers' Domain by:

Collection Funded by:




Loading Standards